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XNS Authentication
Xerox Network Systems (XNS) Authentication was an early protocol suite designed primarily for local network communication and authentication within Xerox environments. It supported both TCP and UDP transport and served to verify identities between connected hosts, enabling access to services and secured exchanges of information inside the XNS ecosystem. While now largely obsolete, it influenced later developments in network protocols and authentication frameworks..
Xerox Network Systems (XNS) Authentication was a component of the broader XNS protocol suite developed by Xerox PARC during the late 1970s and early 1980s. It facilitated authentication of network entities, allowing devices and users in Xerox's proprietary network environment to securely identify themselves before engaging in data exchanges. XNS utilized a layered architecture somewhat analogous to the OSI model, with the authentication protocol operating at the session or application layer.
XNS Authentication typically relied on challenge-response schemes, using identifiers and credentials preconfigured within the local network or directory services. The protocol worked over both TCP and UDP port 56, offering flexibility depending on connection reliability and overhead needs. Services relying on XNS Authentication ran primarily in private Xerox enterprise environments and early research or academic deployments where Xerox equipment dominated.
As networking standards evolved, XNS—and its authentication protocol—fell out of favor, replaced by TCP/IP, Kerberos, and other open or standardized solutions. Despite its obsolescence, XNS Authentication contributed ideas that shaped later directory and authentication systems.